Bawuwan - Urban Art Projects
Lit from within with glowing embers that emerge and move across the three forms from sunset, these sculptural banksia act as beacon to old knowledge, highlighting our ongoing responsibility to country and the continuing importance of cultural regenerative practice.
Lucy Simpson’s Bawuwan for Park Sydney Erskineville comprises three sculptural forms that represent the banksia seedpod, nestled amongst a surrounding pocket parkland as a celebration of First Nations knowledge systems and complex cultural land management practices.
Yuwaalaraay artist Lucy Simpson explored the site’s First Nations history, which has been an important meeting place since time immemorial. She creatively investigated Aboriginal land management practices, specifically the use of fire to care for country, which has been practiced by Australia’s First Nations peoples, including the Gadigal, for thousands of years. In this work, the banksia becomes an important symbol, as a plant which not only endures the fire, but thrives as a result. Bawuwan emerges as a beacon between the old and the new, bringing important cultural practices and knowledges into the public realm.
UAP Public Art Consultancy curated a masterplan of public art for Park Sydney Erskineville, with Bawuwan comprising Stage 1 of the delivery of a public art trail within the mixed-use residential development. Lucy Simpson and UAP collaborated to explore various fabrication techniques for the work, which was cast in aluminium at UAP’s Brisbane foundry with a bespoke black paint rub finish. Emanating soft illuminations from within at night, Bawuwan becomes a carrier of light as a symbol of resilience and duality for all.
Images courtesy Urban Art Projects.